Amazon and iTunes Change Nothing

Many conversations with my Dad prompt some interesting thought and topical discussion so I figured I’d elaborate and share my thoughts here. He emailed me earlier this week pointing to the new Amazon service, Unbox. Additionally, he linked to the iTunes movie store. Does this mean the end of Blockbuster?

Nope, this hardly changes anything.

Sure, we can download movies online now, but does that mean ‘build it and they will come’? No. Unfortunately thats the business model when we look at technology these days. For companies like Amazon and Apple their reach is huge. Rolling out services like these will eventually catch some market share in their massive nets. But is it worth the cost? I don’t have any numbers… but I doubt it.

It’s too early to tell but why why don’t I think ‘they’ll come’? Simple, we don’t use our computers for long-term entertainment. We spend a few minutes looking at YouTube. We watch “viral” 30 second commercials. We don’t sit down and think “this would be a great place to sit for the next two hours”. Well, that’s not true, I say that, but that’s becuase I love my 24″ LCD. But seriously, we are a fast-paced society. I told my Dad we can liken our online video entertainment to that of Vaudeville. We can see a bunch of neat stuff pretty quickly. When and if we have time to sit down and watch a movie it’s not going to be trapped in Windows Media Player or on the bus with my 30G iPod.

Even if the content is portable do I want to watch Pirates on a screen smaller than my fist. No! Movies are, despite their appearance, social forms of entertainment. You sit down in a dark room with another human (or many) and you enjoy it together. You laugh together, get scared together, you feel feelings together.

I don’t think Apple and Amazon can start changing the way we enjoy movies. Prove me wrong…

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About Devin Reams

My name is Devin Reams and I founded this site to provide a useful news and review resource for Colorado skiers and snowboarders (and mountain enthusiasts). I've been skiing since I was a little kid (we moved out here when I was five years old) and I plan to ski for years beyond that. Although cosnow is not my full-time job it is my full-time winter hobby. I've been an "Epic Local" passholder since 2006 (when it was called a "Colorado Pass" or "Five Mountain Pass"). My favorite resorts are Beaver Creek and Breckenridge.

5 thoughts on “Amazon and iTunes Change Nothing

  1. nick

    what about the people who are putting the movies on their portable devices and taking them with on long trips where watching movies on bigger screens isn’t an option?

    Reply
  2. Devin

    Sure, but how big do you think that (potential) market is. Maybe a few thousand people once or twice a year (summer/winter). Maybe a few more business people why fly a lot (are portable devices even allowed anymore?). I think it’s still a small impact for such a big cost to put the media out there.

    Reply
  3. Devin

    Sure, the first week when its announced everyone will try it and it’ll be huge sales. There’s no way the sales he expects (50 million) will be maintained at that level. Let’s check back in a few months…

    Reply
  4. Philip

    I just got my 2000t and all of my songs are skipping in iTunes, and I cant figure out why. If someone could help me out and tell me how to fix this I would really appreciate it because its driving me crazy. Thanks for the replys.

    Reply

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